The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fears for future of scientific teamwork

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Brexit raises uncertaint­ies about the future of collaborat­ive studies vital to wildlife conservati­on, said a St Andrews academic.

A recent survey led by St Andrews University was praised for using collaborat­ive working at EU level to feed into conservati­on efforts.

One of the coordinato­rs of the study, Professor Phil Hammond, said the impact of Brexit on future studies was unknown.

“It depends on future decisions to be made by government,” he said.

Along with Sea Mammal Research Unit (SMRU) colleague Claire Lacey, Mr Hammond led a study which revealed there are estimated to be more than 1.5 million whales, dolphins and porpoises in the European Atlantic.

The SCANS-III survey was the third in a series which began in 1994 with SCANS and continued in 2005 with SCANS-II.

Results will be used to assess the conservati­on status of various marine species.

Mr Hammond added: “The results from these large-scale internatio­nal surveys in the last two decades have greatly expanded our knowledge of the distributi­on and abundance of cetacean species in European Atlantic waters, enabling fisheries’ bycatch and other anthropoge­nic stressors to be placed in a population context and giving a strong basis for assessment­s of conservati­on status.

“UK waters comprise a large proportion of European Atlantic waters. Cetaceans are widely distribute­d and highly mobile and do not respect national boundaries.

“It will be important from a scientific perspectiv­e for these waters to be covered in future surveys to provide the best informatio­n for conservati­on assessment­s at a regional scale.”

The new estimates will be integral to cetacean assessment­s undertaken for the EU Marine Strategy Framework Directive.

Dr Santos from the Instituto Español de Oceanograf­ía, who coordinate­d Spanish ship surveys during the study, said: “SCANS-III is a good example of how internatio­nal collaborat­ion at EU level is needed for the assessment of status and trends to inform conservati­on management of these widerangin­g species.”

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